Defends outcoursing, he doubled down. Im proud of it. David perdue, hes not for you. In her campaign plan, Michelle Nunn admits shes too liberal and her foundation gave money linked to terrorists so nunn needed to fool george ans to win. She attacks perdue with add checkers called mostly false. David perdue spent his career creating thousands of jobs. David perdue will glincrease th economy and bring jobs to washington. Recent polls list this race as a toss up. You can race georgia debates at time online at cspan. Org. Earlier this month, legal scholars and open government advocates held a discussion on Government Transparency and reviewed Current Court cases on the nsas warrantless surveillance program. Held by the bar association, this is an hour and 35 minutes. Good afternoon and welcome. We appreciate you taking the time to be with us today. Im jim oreilly from Cincinnati Ohio and with me are distinguished presenters who will be each giving their own perspective on privacy and info
Fall under the agencys jurisdiction. So often times requesters are making rather broad requests. Agencies are then faced with trying to figure out what it is and what in the world is it that the person actually wants. One way to deal with this we have talked about this for ages. It was ultimately codified in the foia amendments in 1996 was for the agency to come back to the requester and say, i dont understand what your request is asking for or this is really too complex and its too time consuming and if you are willing to narrow the request and here are some suggestions, we can handle the request more expeditiously for you. Thats basically the tradeoff for the agency is that the request gets narrow and more manageable and the bone thats being thrown to the requester is that they will respond to it more expeditiously. That often times still is not it doesnt happen in practice. But thats kind of where the statute is supposed to be. I have a friend who is a litigator in the National Secu
couric: tonight, oh, what a feeling. toyota and the u.s. auto industry are back in the fast lane, and the advertising and broadcasting industries are hitchin a ride. i m katie couric. also tonight, a shiny new apple. we ll show you what the ipad can do. will it be the next must-have electronic ganlet? and a new kind of negative campaigning. candidates not only tar but avatar their opponents. i say, california, let me take you for a ride. captioning sponsored by cbs from cbs news world headquarters in new york, this is the cbs evening news with katie couric. couric: good evening, everyone. it s been a long, windy, and bumpy road for the u.s. auto industry, but the ride is suddenly getting much smoother. carmakers rolled out their latest sales numbers today, and most are showing a big improvement. ford s sales were up 43% last month. toyota, despite the recall crisis, up 35%. and g.m. sales jumped 21%. but chrysler is still struggli struggling. sales there fell 8%. to
but chrysler is still struggli struggling. sales there fell 8%. to win back customers, the carmakers spent more than $2700 per vehicle on incentives like low-interest financing. we begin our coverage tonight with our seen business correspondent anthony mason. reporter: translate is back on track. after revving up its biggest monthly sales increase since 2001. do you think the industry has turned the corner now? i think it has. reporter: at the new york auto show, c.e.o. alan mulally was celebrating a 43% spike in ford sales, led by its midsized sedan the ford fusion. how many of these are you selling? a lot. we re going up every month. reporter: fusion sales skyrocketed in march, up nearly 80% from a year ago. the ford focus and mustang were also up more than 50%. look at the elegance of it! reporter: mullaly said ford is benefitting from being the only u.s. auto maker to avoid bankruptcy. so you think it s been a good selling point? i think that people like,